Monday 23 March 2020

Confusion about compensation leaves student workers scrambling

With the University of Minnesota closing all major campus venues in the wake of the coronavirus outbreak, many student workers have been scrambling to find a source of income in the thick of uncertainty. 

The University began extended reduced operations on Monday, and many University services have already been cut down. On March 17, all University libraries closed, and all recreation and wellness programs — aside from mental health programming — were canceled. For many student workers, these closures mean they are unable to work their regularly scheduled shifts, raising questions and creating anxiety about compensation. 

“We are working on a plan to continue to pay you uninterrupted, regardless of the work you can or cannot do, through the end of the semester,” President Joan Gabel said in a what to do with a computer science degree. “We will revisit this issue, as needed, when the semester concludes on each campus.”

On Friday, some student workers said they received communication from their supervisors about receiving a biweekly paycheck with more details to come in the next few days, bringing some relief to a week of financial uncertainty. According to University policy, student workers should continue to get paid under reduced operations until the term ends or campus returns to normal operations.  

“During extended emergency closings or reduced operations that continue for more than 72 hours, student workers who have no work assignment will receive a biweekly payment equivalent to an average of the number of hours they have worked per week in the current term,” the policy reads. For many student workers, the past week has cultivated stress about paying bills. 

When fourth-year student Charlotte Thomasson learned the Electrical and Computer Engineering Depot she worked at was closing, she said she was scared. Thomasson, who relies on her paycheck for food, utilities and other expenses, started looking at applying for unemployment.

No comments:

Post a Comment

Worldwide ability is rotating north to Canada

 Those were the expressions of Shopify CEO Tobias Lutke in a tweet tending to gifted ability that are as of now kept from working in the U.S...